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States have been
called the
laboratories of
our democracy.
They’re places
where policy
experiments are
carried out. If
the experiment
is successful,
the lessons are
often applied
nationwide.
When
California
voters approved
a ballot
initiative known
as Proposition
13 in the late
1970s, for
example, they
were not only
voting for a
Constitutional
Amendment that
limited property
taxes in the
state, they were
also setting the
stage for the
tax cuts Ronald
Reagan enacted
nationwide a few
years later.
Similarly, when
Wisconsin
Governor Tommy
Thompson signed
into law a bill
that reformed
his state’s
welfare system
in the early
1990s, he was
not only
enacting a piece
of legislation
that required
people to work
in order to
receive a
government
check, he was
also setting the
stage for
similar reforms
that would be
approved for the
rest of the
country later in
the decade.
In
this edition of
The Ripon
Forum, we
look at another
policy
experiment being
carried out in
the states. In
this case,
though, there is
not just one
experiment
underway – there
are many.
Across the
Nation,
Governors and
State
Legislatures are
exploring ideas
and pushing
policy proposals
intended to
address what
polls indicate
is one of the
top domestic
concerns of the
American people
– health care.
We
anchor our
coverage with
the experiment
being pursued in
California,
where the State
Legislature is
meeting in
Special Session
to consider the
health care
reform plan
being pushed by
Governor
Schwarzenegger.
We take a look
at this plan –
the good and the
bad. We also
look at what
other Republican
Governors are
doing to
strengthen
health care in
their states,
and also
consider an
important
question in all
this – is reform
even needed?
This
edition of the
Forum
also includes an
article about
the Medicare
Prescription
Drug program by
Gail Wilensky,
who headed up
Medicare in the
first Bush
Administration
and offers her
expert
assessment of
how well the
plan is working
nearly four
years after its
enactment.
We
are also very
pleased to
feature a Q&A
with University
of Virginia
Professor Larry
Sabato, who
discusses his
new book on “A
More Perfect
Constitution.”
As
always, we hold
you enjoy this
edition and
welcome your
feedback.
Please e-mail us
at
editor@riponsociety.org
with any
thoughts,
comments, or
ideas you may
have.
Bill
Frenzel
Chairman
Emeritus
Ripon Society
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